Introduction. This page attempts to be a stand-alone description for general users of the way Virtual Memory operates in Windows XP. Other pages on this site are.

They call it the "Blue Screen of Death," and that’s precisely what it represents: the death of whatever you were working on and the destruction of your pride. The dreaded critical error message. Talk a stroll down memory lane with this.

Often times, this will correct the problem, even if there was no obvious indication of faulty memory. Blue screen errors can sometimes be triggered by malware (especially on Windows XP). About 10 years ago, I saw someone in Redmond.

Remember the blue screen of death, a Windows PC’s way of telling you it. The second major cause of errors was memory corruption, where memory is not correctly allocated for data structures needed by the driver. The third was.

I found this: //www.makeuseof.com/answers/why-does-my-windows-xp-computer-keep-restarting/ and followed the first advice. I managed to turn the autorestarting off and get the blue screen of death. The error codes is says atm are:.